How To Find Nearby Dark Skies, No Matter Where You Are 55
StartsWithABang (3485481) writes "For those of us living in or around large cities — and that's most of us — we're completely divorced from dark, clear night skies as part of our routine experience. But even though our skies may typically rate a seven or higher on the Bortle Dark Sky Scale, that doesn't mean that significantly darker skies aren't accessible. Here's how to install an interactive light pollution map for yourself, and find the darkest skies near you no matter where you are! (North American-centric, but resources are provided for those elsewhere in the world.)"
Fly past the modern-looking junky blog site (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fly past the modern-looking junky blog site (Score:3, Informative)
No, that's a site with a map - had you actually read the article, you'd have found it included a way to incorporate the information in Google Earth (a map program, you may have heard of it) as well.
The article referenced in the summary had plenty of information - including two different ways to get the dark sky maps.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)